Get them dressed and don't worry about it. If your home is super dry you may want to look into keeping a guitar room humidified, especially if you have solid wood acoustics. For most electrics it is not that big of a deal unless it's extreme humidity conditions either way.
I've gotten some good deals at pawn shops but no screaming deals that I can remember. I bought a vintage Harmony Sovereign for $100, pretty good deal. Usually they want $250 for beat up knockoff strats that cost $149 new. I bet it was fun in the pre internet days. I have made some good yard...
So would you say the glam/hair metal that dominated rock just before grunge was the "real rock"? The golden age of rock and roll was in sharp decline by the time grunge hit. Rock never recovered from the rise of MTV IMO.
Probably not, the replica will most likely not hold its value and it certainly isn't worth 10k to me functionally. If I were going to spend that kind of money it would be on something original like a lanquedoc or more likely a vintage guitar.
What a great guy, and one of my favorite musicians. This guy has devoted his entire life to making great music, MUCH respect for Levon. We will miss you brother...
I don't think so unless maybe if it was really long, I can't prove it though. I'd be interested to hear from the experts. I've wondered this myself because sometimes I know I may eventually remove a pickup so I will leave the leads as long as I can.
Larrivee 03 Series, Epiphone Masterbilt, Breedlove Atlas, Old Guild d40 and put a pickup in it. There are a lot of options. My advice is to get the absolute best acoustic you can and then worry about amplifying it later if it doesn't have a pickup already.
If it is your first finish job it will most likely looks worse than it does now with whatever finish issues it has, unless you do a lot of homework on the subject and are good with stuff like this. Good finish work is not easy, there is a reason its expensive.